When buyers compare moissanite vs diamond, clarity is often the most misunderstood topic. People ask:
“Does moissanite get cloudy?”
“Why do diamonds have clarity grades, but moissanite doesn’t?”
“Will inclusions affect sparkle or size?”
This guide clarifies inclusions, transparency, long-term clarity behavior, and what actually matters for real daily wear in 2025–2026.
1. Clarity fundamentals: what clarity actually measures
Clarity = how free the stone is from:
- internal inclusions,
- tiny crystals, feathers, or fractures,
- surface blemishes.
Diamonds are graded on a strict scale (FL, IF, VVS, VS, SI, I). Moissanite is not graded the same way because:
- it’s lab-grown,
- clarity is naturally high,
- visible inclusions are rare in reputable stones.
| Factor | Diamond | Moissanite | Takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clarity grading system | FL–I3 (strict) | No universal scale | Moissanite clarity is usually high by default |
| Visible inclusions | Common in SI–I grades | Rare in high-quality stones | Moissanite often appears “cleaner” |
| Long-term clouding | No internal clouding unless damaged | Usually none; dirt buildup causes most dullness | Both require cleaning; neither “ages cloudy” |
2. Diamond clarity: why imperfections are normal (and expected)
Natural diamonds form deep underground under extreme pressure. Inclusions are part of their identity:
- VVS diamonds still have microscopic imperfections.
- VS/SI diamonds may show inclusions under magnification.
- I1–I3 diamonds often have visible inclusions to the naked eye.
That means buyers often have to choose between:
- a higher clarity diamond (expensive), or
- a more affordable one with visible imperfections.
Clarity grading matters a lot for diamonds because clarity is a major part of pricing.
3. Moissanite clarity: why it appears consistently clean
Moissanite is grown in controlled lab environments, so:
- inclusions are minimal,
- clarity is typically equivalent to IF–VVS diamond levels,
- you rarely see black spots, feathers, or internal clouds.
When moissanite does have inclusions, they’re typically small faint lines or tiny feathers only visible under magnification — not usually visible in daily wear.
This is why you rarely hear buyers complain about moissanite clarity despite having strong opinions about sparkle or color.
Quick step: If clarity matters to you, run your preferred size through the Moissanite Savings Calculator. Compare what an IF–VVS-level moissanite would cost vs a diamond of the same clarity.
4. The “cloudiness” myth: what’s real and what’s noise
Moissanite does NOT:
- develop permanent internal fog,
- lose clarity over time,
- turn milky from age.
What DOES happen:
- soap film, lotion, and oils collect on the surface,
- micro-scratches on metal settings reflect onto the stone,
- cheap CZ gets mistaken for moissanite, fueling online myths.
99% of “cloudy moissanite” photos online are:
- dirty stones,
- bad lighting,
- stones not actually moissanite.
Clean moissanite has stable clarity for years.
5. Clarity and sparkle: how inclusions affect appearance
Diamond clarity can impact sparkle if inclusions:
- sit near the table (top of the stone),
- interrupt light return,
- create shadows or dark spots.
Moissanite, lacking most inclusions, tends to have:
- a cleaner light path,
- strong brilliance and fire,
- fewer “dead zones.”
That’s part of why moissanite can appear “sparkly” even in lower lighting.
6. Do clarity grades matter for moissanite?
Some vendors market “VVS moissanite,” but these aren’t standardized GIA-style grades—they’re internal vendor labels.
Practically speaking:
- Most reputable moissanite already performs like VVS.
- You rarely need to pay more for a “better clarity grade.”
- Focus more on cut consistency and color level.
7. Common clarity misconceptions (2025–2026)
“Moissanite is too clear to look real.”
If a stone has high clarity and a good cut, it will look extremely bright — but this is not a “fake tell.” Many natural diamonds in engagement rings are VS or VVS, which also appear very clean.
“Diamond clarity guarantees better sparkle.”
Not always — sparkle is influenced more by cut quality than by clarity alone.
“Moissanite clarity can degrade.”
False. Only surface debris changes appearance, not internal structure.
8. Personality fit: who should prioritize clarity?
You’ll care a lot about clarity if:
- you stare closely at your stone every day,
- you’re sensitive to tiny visual imperfections,
- you want “clean glass” optics,
- you photograph your ring often (clarity shows in macro shots).
You may not care as much if:
- size or sparkle matters more than microscopic purity,
- you prefer vintage or rustic stones (inclusions can add character),
- you want maximum value per millimeter.
9. Decision guide: clarity in 2025–2026
Diamonds:
- clarity strongly influences price,
- VVS–IF diamonds are significantly more expensive,
- SI1–SI2 might show visible inclusions depending on cut and placement.
Moissanite:
- clarity is naturally high,
- visible inclusions are rare,
- clouding stories are mostly myths or dirty stones.
Next steps:
- Run your preferred size through the Moissanite Savings Calculator and compare the clarity value gap between moissanite vs diamond.
- Browse the Moissanite Vendor Directory to find vendors with consistent cutting and color control.
- Pair this clarity guide with:
Once you see clarity, sparkle, ethics, and cost side by side, the right choice becomes much clearer.